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              Asia 2025: The Pentagon Prepares for Asian Wars
 Posted 
              19th October 2000
 By 
              Walden Bello
 Planning 
              for a war with China appears to be quite advanced at the Pentagon. 
              A war in which the US moves militarily to defeat an "unstable" China 
              on an adventurist course that includes "occupying more of the Philippines' 
              sea territory" and "intervening in a riot-wracked Indonesia" is 
              one of the scenarios anticipated in a restricted US Department of 
              Defense study entitled Asia 2025. The study, conducted at the US 
              Naval War College in Newport, Rhode Island, in the summer of 1999, 
              provided one of the key inputs to the recently released Pentagon 
              global strategy document, Joint Vision 2020, which foresees more 
              and more of US military concern shifting to Asia from Europe owing 
              to the rise of China, which it identifies as a "peer competitor." 
              Participants in the Asia 2025 study included a high-level team of 
              defense specialists from the US Army, Marine Corps, and Navy, as 
              well as well-known defense analysts Graham Fuller of Rand Corporation, 
              the US Air Force think tank, Aaron Friedberg of Princeton University, 
              and Nicholas Eberstadt of the American Enterprise Institute. In 
              each of the five possible scenarios or contingencies identified 
              by the study, one of the key "recurring geopolitical developments" 
              is the emergence of China as "a force for instability and constant 
              competitor." Another is the rise of India as a regional power that 
              could be a "potential partner of choice for the United States." 
              India's potential role as partner might lead the US to "rethink 
              its strict anti-proliferation policy, as some states that acquire 
              nuclear weapons may actually contribute to American national security 
              goals." As a result of these developments, the US Defense Department 
              faces several key "recurring challenges." One is the necessity of 
              shifting the focus of strategic planning and military resources 
              from Europe to Asia. Another is embarking on a "substantial" strengthening 
              of the US military presence in the region which, in contrast to 
              Europe, is said to be marked by a lack of bases, poor infrastructure, 
              inadequate force structure, and long distances.  
              Two Chinese "Operas"  Five 
              possible scenarios are detailed in the report. In the "Unstable 
              China" scenario, foreign adventurism is an attempt to whip up nationalist 
              sentiments to regain government legitimacy that is being frittered 
              away by a slow-motion economic crash that triggers growing urban 
              and rural unrest. With the defeat of Chinese incursions in Southeast 
              Asia by US naval intervention, Chinese politics enters a tailspin 
              that is accelerated by a "de facto" coup by the military in 2010 
              that launches China onto a new round of expanionism, this time directed 
              at seizing "energy assets" in Siberia, the Russian Far East, and 
              Kazakhstan, which ends with Russia and China on the brink of nuclear 
              war. The Pentagon is also preparing for a "Strong China" scenario. 
              Here, China consolidates its dominance in continental Asia, achieving 
              hegemony in Southeast Asia, establishing virtual protectorates in 
              Central Asia, and carrying out extensive economic penetration of 
              the Russian Far East and Siberia. Continental consolidation is accompanied 
              by a maritime strategy aimed at breaking the US-Japan maritime dominance. 
              This involves "nibbling away" at the South China Sea and island 
              Southeast Asia, buying off a weak India, neutralizing a unified 
              Korea, isolating Japan, and assuming de facto control of Taiwan. 
              Through a versatile and sophisticated combination of military threats, 
              selective military action, and opportunistic diplomacy, China is 
              able to achieve the "permanent strategic subservience" of Japan 
              and an end to the US military alliances and presence in Asia. The 
              end result is an Asia that China dominates but does not conquer 
              or occupy, much along the lines of the pre-colonial system of imperial 
              suzerainty over tributary states, which the report characterizes 
              as China's "only positive historic model." One senses that, in the 
              minds of the Pentagon's analysts, this might be the most likely 
              scenario that could transpire, and the most difficult one for Washington 
              since it would involve pitting the US against a foe that makes very 
              calculated moves that do not box it in a position that exposes it 
              to a hardline military reaction, where Washington has the advantage.  
              The Rise of India  This 
              is the reason why what happens in South Asia is critical to the 
              Pentagon's analysts, since India can either be a counterweight to 
              or an ally of China. In the "New South Asian Order," the chronic 
              state of economic and political crisis in Pakistan deepens into 
              anarchy while political and economic reform strengthens India. Islamic 
              forces infiltrate Kashmir, and in a chain reaction of events, India 
              uses conventional strikes against Pakistan's nuclear missiles, provoking 
              a retaliatory nuclear strike by Pakistan. The US moves in, taking 
              sides by launching conventional strikes against the remaining Pakistani 
              nuclear positions, and warning China to stay out of the conflict. 
              In a parallel process, the Taliban fail to establish their hegemony 
              in Afghanistan, resulting in its descent into chaos, provoking Iran, 
              Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan to move in to annex territory controlled 
              by their own ethnic groups. Iran emerges as a key player, and this 
              is partly due to the fact that its "moderation and democratization" 
              have led to an improvement in its relations with the United States. 
              Pakistan disintegrates after the war with India, and the Indian 
              Army "moves in to restore order and establish control." An Indian 
              Confederation emerges that becomes a regional hegemon that solidifies 
              its ties with Iran and the other Gulf states. China is a big loser 
              from this event. However, it turns its attention to penetrating 
              the Russian Far East, the Indochina peninsula, and other rimlands. 
              A new regional alliance emerges, its key actors being the US, India, 
              and Iran. "The Asian energy security environment changes fundamentally," 
              notes the report. "The United States finds unexpected partners, 
              to wit, in India and Iran. Together India and Iran take on enhanced 
              SLOC (sea lanes of communications) protection responsibilities, 
              potentially reducing US responsibilities in the Gulf and Indian 
              Ocean." There are two other scenarios played out in the report, 
              one entitled "Asia Realigns", the other "The New Sino-Indian Condominium." 
              The key lessons underlined in these contingencies are the emergence 
              of China as the greatest regional threat to US interests, the need 
              to address the lack of forward operating bases in Southeast Asia 
              and Southeast Asia if Washington is to remain a key player in these 
              regions, the emerging strategic potential of India, and the need 
              to prevent at all costs a China-India alliance.  
              Some Implications  Reading 
              this document raises the issue of how the Defense Department views 
              the Clinton administration's approach toward China, which stresses 
              "engaging" that country to allow US financial and industrial firms 
              to reap opportunities from exploitation of the China market. The 
              administration, backed by corporate power and the financial lobby, 
              is also a big force supporting China's entry into the World Trade 
              Organization (WTO), hoping that the application of WTO rules will 
              push China to end its protectionist trade and investment structure 
              and weaken the currently strong state regulation of the operations 
              of transnational corporations. One suspects from Asia 2025 that 
              people at the Pentagon are not happy with the current policy, which 
              might be viewed as a way that the country they identify as the US's 
              strategic rival could strengthen itself both economically and strategically, 
              using US investment and trade. This line of thinking would most 
              likely see China as the net gainer in a stronger economic relationship 
              with the United States. If this is the likely outcome, then the 
              policy is mistaken. One does not strengthen a strategic rival; one 
              cuts it off as the pass. In short, it is likely that that the conflict 
              between "engagement" and "containment" as the strategic approach 
              towards China will come to a head, perhaps in the near future. What 
              are we to make of all this? The lesson is clear: with the consistent 
              identification of China as the US' rival in all scenarios, the study 
              speaks volumes about the Pentagon's grim determination to counter 
              any significant threat to US strategic hegemony in Asia. Focus on 
              the Global South (FOCUS), c/o CUSRI, Chulalongkorn University, Bangkok 
              10330 THAILAND. Tel: 662 218 7363/7364/7365/7383 Fax: 662 255 9976 
              E-mail: N.Bullard@focusweb.org Web Page www.focusweb.org 
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